Using a GPS in California or Minnesota

What do the states of Minnesota and California have in common? Tick tick tick tick…

Give up? Up until fairly recently, it was illegal to put a GPS on your windshield in those states. Imagine buying a new GPS with the suction mount and getting pulled over a few days later for using the mount in the box. We got all kinds of stories from people after their wallet was $100 lighter and sold a lot of vent, cup holder and dash mounts as a result. Fortunately, these two holdouts have now joined the rest of the country in permitting attachment of GPS units to your windshield.

Luckily, lawmakers have mulled things over in California. In 2010, California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed into law Senate Bill 1567, the GPS Windshield Safety Act (we didn’t make that up) which permits the mounting of portable GPS units in specific areas of vehicle windshields. The official law right from the State of California goes like this:

26708. (a) (1) A person shall not drive any motor vehicle with any object or material placed, displayed, installed, affixed, or applied upon the windshield or side or rear windows.

(b) This section does not apply to any of the following.

12) A portable Global Positioning System (GPS), which may be mounted in a seven-inch square in the lower corner of the windshield farthest removed from the driver or in a five-inch square in the lower corner of the windshield nearest to the driver and outside of an airbag deployment zone, if the system is used only for door-to-door navigation while the motor vehicle is being operated.

While I’m no lawyer, it sounds like you are restricted to attaching your GPS to the left hand corner of your windshield. That’s not too convenient. I don’t know about you but I like mine right smack in the middle of the windshield. The California law is pretty detailed and I can’t quite figure out their reasoning. I suppose the GPS, especially larger ones, can partially obscure your view if placed in the middle of the windshield. I never had an issue with it. I also suppose that it can get in the way of an airbag deployment but that depends upon a lot of factors, primarily the location of your airbags. By the way, just for the record, California is OK if you attach a toll tag such as EZPass to your windshield.

Meanwhile, Minnesota passed an equally useful law in 2006 now known as Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2013, section 169.71, subdivision 1. Again, I’m not a lawyer but sounds like Minnesota residents also got a break. The law states that it’s ok to use your windshield as the mount point as long as it’s on the lower portion of the front windshield. The official law goes like this:

Prohibitions generally; exceptions:

(iv) global positioning systems or navigation systems when mounted or located near the bottom most portion of the windshield

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